" "Each of us has some responsibility to make a contribution.
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You decide: Are we coddling Canadian seniors?
Canada needs to prevent poverty and undue suffering in old age Susan Eng : Some ask, “Must Canada stop coddling its spoiled seniors?”

The answer is no, not unless we can find any who are coddled. In targeting this mythical group, we risk undermining the few public programs aimed at preventing poverty and other indignities in old age.
Trudeau heckled, booed at youth labour forum in Ottawa. 16. Generation Now. Millennials and healthcare: 25 things to know. There is a lot of talk about the impact the aging baby boomer population is going to have on the healthcare industry, but many trends are being driven by another sect of the population: millennials.

Note lack of personal relationship with physician. significant because assumption/argument against UBER for healthcare is often that health depends on longitudinal relationships of trust rather than one-off episodic services. Millennials have a different trust model, different expectation, more open to UBER type models – dcruickshank

Millennials are defined as individuals ages 18 to 24 or 18 to 34, depending on the source.

Having lived with the Internet and near instant access to a wealth of information, many millennials approach healthcare — either as employees or consumers — with different expectations and skill sets than previous generations. And although baby boomers are often considered the "largest generation" in number, millennials actually outnumber the boomers by 7.7 million.
7 Ways Millennials Are Changing The Healthcare Industry (And What It Means To You)
7 Ways Millennials Are Changing The Healthcare Industry (And What It Means To You) As the largest generation in the United States, and one whose purchasing power continues to grow, Millennials are having a major and increasing influence on just about every industry out there.

Healthcare is no exception.
Docs have 'grave concerns' about eHealth review. TORONTO - Ontario’s doctors say they have “grave concerns” about a key review of eHealth by a government privatization guru.

To what degree might medical community be a well-meaning barrier to consumer empowerment? – dcruickshank

Ontario Medical Association president Dr.

Virginia Walley wrote to Ed Clark on Thursday to express the group’s concern about his review of the health records bureaucracy. Clark, the former TD Bank CEO who recommended the partial sale of Hydro One, was appointed Friday by Health Minister Eric Hoskins to look at the agency. Clark’s been asked to find ways to appraise its potential to raise cash for the government as it tries to fund billions in infrastructure projects. But Walley said patient privacy has to put before profit.